Hollywood's $67 million-a-year man opens up about life at work and at home — Peter Pan costumes and 'Jersey Boys' sing-alongs with his son — as wife Julie Chen warns: "If you cross him … you're dead to him"

This story first appeared in the Oct. 3 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine.

Two and a half years ago, Leslie Moonves was sitting at midtown Manhattan's Music Box Theatre for a production of One Man, Two Guvnors, laughing so hard his sides ached.

Onstage was an English comedian whom the CBS chief executive had never heard of before: James Corden, a now-36-year-old with a résumé that includes a screwball mix of writing, acting, singing, dancing and emceeing. Moonves loved what he saw that evening, and later online, and immediately was conspiring to bring Corden to his network. He began by lobbying Bob Boyett, one of the play's producers whom he knew from his days at Lorimar during the late 1980s.

"The guy was just so appealing," says Moonves, now seated in his 35th-floor corner office at CBS' Black Rock headquarters in New York, where he spends about a third of his time. He thought he had snagged the comic to do a sitcom this past season, but when that deal didn't come together, Moonves wouldn't let up. In May, he and his entertainment chairman, Nina Tassler, had Corden come by Black Rock to discuss the possibility of late night. They were dazzled by his pitch, which highlighted his unique brand of comedy — "a cross between Fred Astaire and Jack Black," says Tassler — and eschewed the customary late-night riffing on current events. That he'd be a total unknown to most U.S. viewers was of little concern to Moonves, who saw the potential for a distinctive sensibility that could make the franchise a part of the conversation in the way that micro-niche predecessor Craig Ferguson did not. On Sept. 8, the news broke: Corden will be the new host of The Late Late Show.

When I ask Moonves, 64, why someone of his stature — the CEO of a $30 billion company who took home a staggering $67 million in pay in 2013 — is out there scouting new late-night talent along with other hands-on creative tasks such as reading scripts and watching casting tapes, he says without hesitation, "Because I still love it." What he doesn't need to say but is obvious from his track record — CBS is the most-watched network for 11 of the past 12 seasons and recently earned 11 Primetime Emmys, second only to HBO — is that he's better at it than almost anyone else. "He's the man with a platinum gut," says DreamWorks Animation CEO and longtime friend Jeffrey Katzenberg, who tried to poach Moonves more than once in his career. "He has an instinct about the audience — who they are, what they want and how to entertain them — and he has done it with a level of success and reliability that is almost unprecedented."

What becomes clear as I spend time with the gregarious executive over multiple days in August is that he is a vestige of an earlier era when showmen, rather than MBAs, ran the entertainment industry. He has no pretenses about his accessibility either, as willing to chat up a TMZ cameraman as he is any of the 17,000-plus CBS employees who covet his attention. And though questions loom about his future in a post-Sumner Redstone organization, a source of great stress among his many disciples, he's going as full bore as ever. Those closest to him suggest it's a passion for the game — and the clout that comes with winning at it — that fuels the onetime actor, who can intimidate as effortlessly as he can charm. Now, as the broadcast industry of which he is the most vociferous supporter is being threatened by technological advances and changing viewer habits, Moonves is fighting mercilessly to adapt with it, championing a second revenue stream that's poised to bring his network $2 billion a year from affiliate fees and cutting in-season deals with Amazon and Netflix that he would have run screaming from only a few years ago.

"There are two things about Les: He's con- ­stantly curious, and he's ridiculously competitive," says WME co-CEO Ari Emanuel, who considers Moonves a friend and mentor. "We'll go to Augusta together [for the Masters], and he'll sit there and quote you ratings and shares and seven-day numbers. It's crazy that he still gives a shit, but that's just who he is."

•••

Heading into the fall season, his 20th at CBS and 33rd in the business, Moonves had been feeling more bullish than usual. After all, he and his CBS Sports chairman, Sean McManus, had negotiated a $275 million deal for the rights to Thursday Night Football, which not only would provide the ultimate launchpad for new series but also could generate a hefty $500,000 for 30-second spots. Then came the early September news that the NFL had severely botched the domestic violence case of Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice, and a high-profile opener — the Ravens hosting the Pittsburgh Steelers — became a test in crisis management.

Moonves acted as he often does: calmly and decisively. On the ground in Baltimore, he and McManus scrapped a song by Rihanna (herself once battered) and celebratory intro and moved forward with plans for sportscaster James Brown to deliver a powerful pregame commentary and recap of CBS This Morning anchor Norah O'Donnell's unsparing interview with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell. From the outside, it appeared Moonves had averted a public relations disaster, with outlets including The Hollywood Reporter praising the network's handling of the events. The following morning, Nielsen reported that a whopping 21 million viewers had tuned in. Although the CBS chief acknowledges "a couple of sponsors" asked to have ads shifted (one to a different part of the game; the other to another game), he downplays the impact. "We filled up those spots in about five seconds," he says, brushing off the potential for continued backlash as additional cases of domestic violence surface. "As a television product, the NFL is still very valuable."

If all goes as Moonves anticipates, it'll be the second major headache he will have successfully staved off this year. The first came with the expertly managed handoff between late-night hosts David Letterman and Stephen Colbert, who's expected to begin as host of Late Show in fall 2015. Moonves says he and Letterman had been talking for some time about the right point at which to hang up the show. "We'd obviously seen the errors of some of the other people in handling these situations, and that idea was so abhorrent to Dave and to me," he says, referring to NBC's series of bumbled baton tosses. Together, he and his longtime host decided to wait until after the noise fromJay Leno's departure had died down. On April 3, Letterman got to choreograph his own sendoff, announcing on air that this current season would be his last.

Dozens of comics reached out about filling the role, including reps for Chris Rock, but Moonves and Tassler had their hearts set on Colbert, whose Comedy Central entry often outrates its broadcast competition. Within a week, they had very quietly hammered out a deal, the finishing touches of which Moonves finalized from an NCAA Final Four game in Dallas. On April 10, CBS sent out a press release announcing the news. "I think Colbert is going to be the conscience of America," says Moonves, confident that his new host, who plans to shed his faux-conservative persona, will fill the Letterman void. "Jay may have gotten higher numbers, but when 9/11 happened, people tuned into David."

Nearer term, Moonves is focused on regaining CBS' primetime dominance. Coming off a particularly rough season in which the network fell to No. 3 with younger viewers (it remained No. 1 in total viewers and adults 25-to-54), he suggests he's not as worried about the competition as he was last year. "When I saw The Blacklist, I said, 'This is going to be trouble,' " he recalls of the top-rated James Spader drama on NBC. "When it killed our show [Hostages], that didn't feel good. … The executives who say, 'Oh it didn't matter,' that's bull."

His new offerings include a broad family comedy, The McCarthys, and fresh iterations of NCIS and CSI. If it sounds like more of the same, that's by design. Critics may slam CBS' programming for being too formulaic — "It pretty much programs its network and runs its business as if it were still the 1990s," wrote James Poniewozik in Time — but the formula has worked for Moonves. While his premium cable outlet Showtime supplies the cachet with such shows as Homeland and Masters of Sex, his flagship network consistently delivers billion-dollar franchises, including those staples NCIS and CSI. The former recently supplanted the latter as the most-watched show in the world —and CBS owns both.

But rather than sit back and hope viewers show up as he once did, Moonves has been aggressive about selling his programming on different platforms — on air and online — around the world, creating new revenue sources and weaning his business from its dependence on fickle advertisers. And he's shrewdly used his growing stable of live events, which include sports (NFL and SEC football, PGA golf) and award shows (Tonys, Grammys), along with returning hits to promote his new fare to the widest audience possible. Wall Street has rewarded the strategy: In the five-year period ending in 2013, CBS' stock price appreciated 678 percent, significantly exceeding that of each of its media peers and beating its nearest competitor (Viacom) by more than 300 percentage points.

As premiere week approaches, Moonves sits with two of his creative executives — studio boss David Stapf and CBS current programming chief Glenn Geller — in a room off of his Studio City office to hear what's in store. "Whaddya got?" he says, rubbing his tanned hands together with a childlike excitement on a morning in late August. Geller throws out the first stunt with a mix of enthusiasm and angst: The ladies of daytime chat show The Talk — including Moonves' wife, Julie Chen — each will make cameos on a primetime show. "Love that," says the CBS chief, the wheels in his head already turning about a potential CBS-owned Entertainment Tonight tie-in.

“When Leslie first fell in love with me, he said, ‘You know why I love you, Jules? Because I don’t impress you.’ And I said, ‘You do impress me; I’m just not blowing smoke up your butt like everybody else,’ ” says Chen, Moonves’ wife of 10 years.

There's palpable relief in the room, and Geller continues: The NCIS stars will appear on the New Orleans spinoff; CSI: Cyber lead Patricia Arquette will drop by the franchise original. Each idea scores the endorsement of Moonves, part impassioned cheerleader, part demanding coach. Before long, he's pitching his own ideas: Have they considered having Justin Bieber stop by freshman drama Scorpion, which his manager Scooter Braun produces? Or maybe one of the other musical acts on Braun's roster? He's eager to hear how the footage from the new crop is coming in, too. Is Tea Leoni's Madam Secretary skewing more family or political? And can he get his hands on the latest cut of NCIS: New Orleans?

Looming over his right shoulder as he speaks is a framed poster of The Godfather, his all-time favorite movie because, he'll tell me later, "It's about family, business, competition and loyalty." When I state the obvious — that these are all themes that resonate in his life — he lets out a hearty laugh and adds, "And there are consequences to behavior." I repeat the line to Chen, his wife of 10 years and host of CBS' Big Brother in addition to The Talk, and she howls. "If you cross him, he doesn't forget," she says. "You're dead to him."

Qualities that historically have rankled the CBS chief include dishonesty, disloyalty and a desire for the spotlight, with insiders noting that the men who have thrived under Moonves, a classic alpha male, tend to be egoless. (The women often have had bigger personalities.) He has a hard time firing people, even those whom he perceives to have wronged him, but is said to have an easier time freezing them out. And as his wife warned, those who have landed on his bad side have found it almost impossible to recover. Remember Terry Botwick, the network's high-powered head of current programming and specials in the late 1990s before being vanquished by Moonves? Or how about CBS Productions' mid-1990s chief, Andy Hill, for whom a Google search today turns up a low-budget site to book him for speaking gigs?

Many more remain in Moonves' good graces and are rewarded with fierce loyalty. In fact, several core members of his team have been with him for more than two decades, including Tassler, Stapf and scheduler Kelly Kahl, who followed him from Lorimar. And though he can be very hands-on — "There's no detail too small for him," says one employee — his executives remain faithful because they feel cared for and because they like being on a winning team. Tassler likens his leadership style to that of a good parent. "It's not so much fear of anger; it's fear of disappointment," she says. "You don't want to disappoint someone who sets such a high standard for himself and for us."

Leslie has always been the cool older brother,” says Jon Moonves, who spends his Sunday afternoons with extended family at his older brother’s Beverly Hills home.

With family, that tough guy disappears. "Julie's the disciplinarian," he says of the setup with their 5-year-old son, Charlie. "I'm more of a softie than I'd like to let people believe." His daughter, Sara, from his first marriage, says it was no different when she and her two brothers were growing up. "He was definitely a pushover," she laughs, recounting trips to New York where she'd persuade him to take her shopping. Now 29 and working in New York as an editor at Vogue, she talks to her dad every day and still is counted on to watch the CBS pilots and weigh in, just as she did when she was a kid. "And there hasn't been a single year where he doesn't want me to come to the upfronts," she adds, "to the point where I'm like, 'Dad, I've been …' And he'll say: 'Please come. You have to see these new shows.' "

He's that much more involved with Charlie, a commentary on both his position and his life stage. CBS employees catch glimpses of his softer side at Halloween, when their boss arrives in costume with his son. Last year, Moonves was dressed as Captain Hook, courtesy of the CBS costume department, with Chen as Wendy and Charlie as Peter Pan. At home, the youngest Moonves makes a hobby of re-enacting his favorite movies and shows, and his father is often, and willingly, roped in. Since seeing Jersey Boys, for instance, he likes playing Frankie and tasking Moonves with one of the other Jersey boys. "Charlie will want Leslie to dance, but he won't allow him to sing because Leslie will want to take over — that's the hot dog in my husband," jokes Chen. "Charlie will be like, 'No, no, no. Only I sing,' and Leslie will be like, 'OK!' — like a trained puppy dog."

•••

It's perhaps the only arena in which Moonves rolls over. His competitive drive extends to the golf course, the poker table and, according to Chen, family get-togethers.

"We'll play charades at our family gatherings, and literally there have been cousins or in-laws whom Leslie will seriously consider dumping from the guest list the next year because they were bad at charades and made his team lose," she says, adding that she and her husband are competitive with each other, too, making silly bets on a regular basis. "It's the same $100 bill that goes back and forth, and even when I prove to him he's wrong, he's still angling and trying to argue why he's not really wrong."

Moonves's younger brother, Jon, a top Hollywood attorney who represents Ray Romano and Chen, suggests he comes by that competitiveness genetically. Growing up in Long Island's Valley Stream, he'd watch his gas station owner father play in a competitive league for softball, among other sports, and he nurtured a similar passion in his three children. "He would never let us win as kids. It was always, 'You've got to earn it,' " says Jon Moonves. Although their dad is now 93, he hasn't lost that edge. At a recent family wedding, he challenged Jon to a game of pingpong and won.

As a child, the CBS chief was a jock, too, excelling at baseball, football and tennis. And though he and his mother, a nurse, took regular outings to the theater, he didn't embrace his own acting talents until he got to Bucknell, where he performed in an experimental theater production of The Serpent as well as other plays. After graduating in 1971, he began studying at Sandy Meisner's prestigious Neighborhood Playhouse in New York and landed parts on such TV shows as The Six Million Dollar Man and Cannon. But when he found himself doing considerably more bartending than acting — part-time at Tavern on the Green, longtime home of the CBS upfront party, and later at the Improv in Los Angeles when Letterman and Leno were coming up — he knew he had to reassess.

It was Warren Littlefield, then an NBC development executive, who helped Moonves score his first job in TV development with Smothers Brothers producer Saul Ilson in 1981. "I probably said something like, 'Don't f— this up because I've kicked the door open,' " laughs Littlefield. That gig led to another at Fox and later Lorimar, where Moonves shot up the corporate ladder before the company was acquired by Warner Bros. for $1.2 billion in 1989. Moonves' legendary run as Warner Bros. TV studio chief culminated with the 1994 launch of Friends and ER, both on NBC. "We were on top of the world. We had like 23 network shows," he says, before his tone changes: "And then I came to CBS."

A framed shot of Moonves flanked by then Warner Bros. TV stars on the July 1995 cover of New York magazine hangs in Studio City and Manhattan, too.

The move offered more power and a larger purview, but the network was lagging in third place when he arrived in 1995. "The fact that we were in last place killed me," says Moonves. He was as horrified by CBS' old-fogey reputation as he was by the team's work ethic; on his first Friday on the job, he was shocked to find the office three-quarters empty. "I wrote this email to every employee at CBS that said, 'I'm sure at ABC and NBC at 3:30 p.m. on a Friday afternoon people are still working. Next Friday afternoon, I'm going to walk around the office building and we'll see if things are different,' " he says. That got people's attention — not just at CBS but throughout the industry.

"They were in last place, and nobody was even bothered," he says, still sounding incredulous two decades later. To this day, Moonves is known for his own formidable work ethic, arriving at the office by 8 a.m. and regularly sending emails several hours before that. He continues, louder now: "If you're in the television business, you better be a little bit competitive. You better say, 'Gee, I want that script more than the other networks.' If there's a lack of caring about winning, you're not going to win."

•••

What happened next is the stuff ofMoonves' legacy. In less than a decade, he had transformed CBS into the No. 1 network, with the help of the NFL and the one-two punch of Survivor and CSI, and later its spinoffs. Though his tastes skew more toward Game of Thronesand The Sopranos, he'd latched onto a winning formula of accessible programs, appealing in their predictability. "We knew the game had changed when Les went to CBS," says Littlefield, then-chief of NBC, who recalls putting up billboards for his hits across the street from CBS to get under his competitor's skin.

By the time CBS and Viacom split in early 2006 — a strategic move by Redstone to unlock value — Moonves was named CEO of CBS Corp. He had no formal training in matters of Wall Street but found he learned quickly. When I meet up with him at an investor dinner at Craft's Century City outpost in late August, he's as comfortable talking about the recent wave of media mergers as he would be his fall casting choices. And it's the success he's had on the business side that has most impressed peers like Barry Diller. "Coming from where he came from, the number of people who have been able to master corporate life at that level is extremely rare," says the IAC chairman. "He has as perfect pitch running the company as he does in programming."

Which is not to say Moonves' run has been devoid of headaches. Amid a $500 million breach of contract lawsuit, Howard Stern famously went on CBS' Late Show wearing an "I Hate Les Moonves" T-shirt; after being tossed off Two and a Half Men, Charlie Sheen took to the web and called him "Les Than Goonves": "Part scoundrel, part my hair to side." There have been challenged divisions like CBS Films — "I think there's a much greater upside in the television business, and I like it a lot more," he says — and some high-profile bets gone wrong. Among them: the 2006 decision to "blow up" the then-stodgy news group following Dan Rather's messy ouster by hiring Katie Couric. The $15 million-a-year plan backfired. "She tried very hard, but it just didn't work," Moonves says dismissively. Scott Pelley, who replaced her in 2011, has proved a safer (and cheaper) play, but his ratings — up 12 percent year-over-year — still lag behind ABC and NBC.

More recently, there was the public battle over TV-over-the-web service Aereo (CBS and broadcasters won at the Supreme Court), a prolonged standoff with Time Warner Cable and, of course, the Lara Logan saga at 60 Minutes. While the latter remains the news arm's crown jewel, it was tarnished late last year when it aired an erroneous Benghazi report that relied on Logan's now-discredited interview with security contractor Dylan Davies. The decision to suspend Logan rather than fire her was handled by the news division, though Moonves says he was involved and was "fine" with it.

"It was a mistake that was acknowledged," he says, "and we've moved on." He refutes a damning May 2014 article about Logan in New York magazine in which writer Joe Hagan attributed her rise at 60 to Moonves' enthusiasm for her. "I had one meeting alone with Lara in this office early on," he says, shaking his head. "Clearly that story had a little bit of an agenda."

•••

When I join Moonves on an August morning in his Black Rock office, once used by the original father of broadcasting, William S. Paley, I see another side to him: the political junkie.

Dressed in his Manhattan uniform — black suit, bold tie — he settles in beside his boyish news president, David Rhodes, 40, who has come armed with polling data for the November elections. The two huddle over an iPad as Rhodes walks his boss through a mock-up of the 24-hour digital news network, CBS' answer to CNN, which they're hoping to launch in October. (Since Time Warner rebuffed 21st Century Fox's acquisition attempt this summer, buying a spun-off CNN no longer is on the table.) They go over potential titles and the plan for on-air talent, which will skew younger and more social media savvy than those fronting the network's current news shows. CBS correspondents Elaine Quijano and Jeff Glor will be among the anchors, Rhodes tells him, noting that there will be more names coming. Moonves, leaning forward, voice booming, likes what he sees.

But his excitement ticks up another notch when the conversation turns to the midterm elections. Holding the tracking figures in his hand, he peppers the news executive with questions about the hottest races and the impact certain results would have on Wall Street. Moonves doesn't have all the answers in this setting as he seems to in L.A., and he's eager to know more. Soon, he and Rhodes are swapping stories and political gossip, with Moonves — a lifelong Democrat who has a framed photograph of him with Presidents Obama and Clinton in both his New York and L.A. offices — admitting he has become friendly with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie through the Allen & Co. conference in Sun Valley, Idaho.

Moonves keeps a picture of himself seated beside President Clinton and President Obama at Walter Cronkite’s memorial in his New York and L.A. offices.

Later, Moonves tells me that he's been flirting for some time with the idea of venturing into the political arena himself, though the thought of actually running for office repels him. It's a subject he and pal Robert Iger of Disney, whose political aspirations have garnered considerably more ink, have discussed. "Bob would be great," he says, "but I said to him, 'Bob, do you really want to have your picture on the front page of the newspapers every day?' And by the way, look at Mike Bloomberg; he was out seven nights a week at five events a night."

More appealing is the path taken by Moonves buddy John Emerson, who made his fortune at investment firm Capital Group before being tapped as ambassador to Germany in 2013. Although Moonves stresses he never was made a formal offer, he and Bill Clinton had talked about the possibility of Moonves becoming the ambassador to Spain during his administration but the timing wasn't right. "You have to be very rich to be an ambassador. I wasn't rich then," he says, adding: "[Emerson's] doing a sensational job. So, you know, maybe? Who knows."

I see this talk of the future as an ideal opening for a question about succession at CBS. And as far as I can tell, it's the only one that pushes the supremely confident CEO ever so slightly out of his comfort zone. Some background: When Moonves extended his contract through 2017 two years ago, he did so with provisions that he'd report to a board after Redstone's death — and should anyone interfere with that board, he could walk away with a fat check. So long as Redstone is alive, he controls CBS and Viacom through his National Amusements; but when the 91-year-old is gone, a trust will assume control of his voting shares. And though it's not publicly known who's involved in that trust, Viacom CEO Philippe Dauman is allegedly among the people in it — and Moonves is not. Via email, Redstone praises Moonves' "sharp business skills" and "excellent creative instincts" but staves off a question about his future. "Other than to point out that I am still here," Redstone writes.

Moonves insists the media has made too much of the rivalry between him and Dauman, often described as the corporate suit to his showman. "We have lunch every few months, and there is absolutely no animosity," he says, though not entirely convincingly. He reiterates a point he's made before — that Viacom and CBS function better apart, and that he doesn't see that changing — before shooting down a rumor that he might gather a team of investors to buy CBS in a post-Redstone era. "I don't see that happening. … The status quo is pretty darn good, and there's no reason that shouldn't continue," he says. Then he pauses just long enough to regain that classic Moonves enthusiasm, his grin flashing again, his voice carrying, as he declares, "I'm not planning on going anywhere."

•••

MOONVES' BIG BETS
The CBS chief has his eye -- and wallet -- on Colbert, award shows and, he hopes, more NFL

Live EventsMoonves is eager to grow his live business, having inked recent deals for the Hollywood Film Awards and Thursday Night Football. The latter deal only runs one season, but Moonves has been vocal about wanting more.

A Scripted Summer
Although he admits he expected more viewers to flock to Halle Berry's Extant, he already has committed to a 2015 summer bet, James Patterson's Zoo, which will be profitable pre-premiere.

Late Show, 2.0
In a bid to be a bigger part of the late-night conversation, Moonves is putting his money on two significantly younger, Twitter-savvy hosts -- only one of whom you know.

24-Hour NewsMoonves didn't get his shot at CNN, so his news division will look to roll out a 24-hour digital news network, which will count ElaineQuijano among its anchors, ahead of the midterm elections.

Acquisitions?
Having spun off the outdoor business valued at $6 billion, Moonves says he has "dry powder." Still, CBS doesn't have Disney's deep pockets to buy a Maker Studios, so they'll "do those sorts of things homegrown."